2012: The Year of Rothbard
by
Mike Holmes
Recently
by Mike Holmes: Observation
on School Shooting
While the year
2012 may be remembered for many things, to me it will be fondly
remembered as the Year of Rothbard. Murray N. Rothbard died nearly
18 years ago, but this past year was witness to an amazing resurgence
of Rothbardian thinking, intellectual influence and, most critical
to any true Rothbardian, meaningful action. Google his name and
you will find nearly 61,000 related links. Rothbard’s books continue
to sell in the thousands annually and can be found on Amazon and
other online sellers, often in updated editions published by the
Mises Institute. LRC regularly reprises Rothbard’s essays on subjects
which are as fresh and relevant as when they were first written.
Why in particular
was 2012 the Year of Rothbard? First and foremost it was the powerful
and amazing follow up Ron Paul GOP presidential primary campaign,
which built and expanded upon his earlier 2008 effort. It was the
Presidential Primary Campaign That Could, smashing old dogmas and
tired political cant with Truth Spoken to Power. Ron and Murray
were old friends and had a mutual admiration society going back
to the 1960s, even before Paul considered entering politics. Ron
Paul’s economics, historical perspective and political philosophy
was and is largely Rothbardian (as well as Misean and Austrian,
Rothbard’s own intellectual school). Ron Paul’s politics can be
described as constitutional Rothbardianism.
Rothbard was
an anarchist and founder (and later Godfather) of the contemporary
market anarchist wing of political economics. But he was no narrow
minded anarchist scold or cult of personality dogmatist. He always
loved watching politics and was immensely interested in the nuts
and bolts of campaigns, elections and the use of politics for deeper
forms of intellectual education. Rothbard publicly praised and supported
Ron Paul’s political career from the outset and remained an unstinting
lifelong supporter throughout Ron’s principled "maverick"
career. Rothbard, like Paul, cared little about political labels
or parties per se. He cared about meaningful action and the process
of education and intellectual change. Ron Paul acknowledges that
his political career was an intellectual, educational odyssey aimed
at educating minds, not merely passing bits and pieces of largely
meaningless statist legislation.
Paul’s 2012
Republican primary battle racked up millions of votes from GOP voters
who probably never heard of Murray Rothbard, but nonetheless voted
for the only Rothbardian on their ballots. Paul courageously spoke
out against the statist Republican orthodoxy which was faithfully
parroted by all of the other Republican presidential contenders.
Most of these now forgotten candidates were ginned up by Establishment
media as stealth Ron Paul killers, only to flame out or embarrass
themselves out of contention when exposed to public scrutiny. Bachman,
Pawlenty, Perry, Santorum, Huntsman, Gingrich? Throw in eventual
winner Romney and you have a cast of intellectual midgets who rival
the Seven Dwarves for dopiness.
Paul’s recent
GOP presidential primary campaigns were made possible and successful
by the Internet. Its unfettered and unfiltered ability to spread
libertarian ideas bypassed traditional political censorship. Paul
was the only Republican cheered wildly in huge campus rallies attended
by young voters and newly energized middle class voters who recognized
truth when they heard it. This was an astonishing vindication of
Rothbardian political strategy, who had long championed the working
middle class as the main engine of libertarian progress. Paul’s
campaign was the explosion of Rothbardian ideas spread directly
by means of blogs, websites, YouTube videos and related social media
postings.
Ron Paul’s
attacks on Empire and its finance arm, the Federal Reserve, struck
deep chords with Web savvy audiences and resonated to loud choruses
of "End the War, End the Fed" by thousands of youthful
followers at campaign events. This is what Rothbard hath wrought
in 2012!
The billion
dollar defeat of the GOP establishment in November of 2012 left
the Republican Party in tatters, its intellectual and moral decay
all too obvious. Only the Rothbardian inspired Tea Party influence
remains intact, though weakened by its own intellectual contradictions.
Yet the Paulian movement grows, with tens of thousands of young
eyes opened, able to see the Establishment political system for
what it truly is: rotten to the core, propped up only by a constant
stream of lies.
Ron Paul kicked
open the door to radical new political-intellectual thinking. Groups
like the Mises Institute and others, hundreds of websites, led by
LRC, continue to churn out Rothbard-Misean analysis on a daily basis
to feed this new dynamic. Ron Paul related and other political groups
continue this fight in the electoral arena. This flood of libertarian
truth and energy can’t and won’t be stopped.
And for longtime
friends and admirers of Rothbard, the year 2012 ended up with the
proverbial cherry on top of the ice cream cone. That moment came
with news of the ouster of one Edward Crane, longtime boss of the
Cato Institute. He and the libertarian billionaire Koch brothers
(Charles and David) were the infamous Cato shareholders who forced
Rothbard out of Cato in the early 80s via treachery and betrayal
of principle. The worm finally turned on Boss Crane in the summer
of 2012 however, when the mostly hands-off Kochs decided they wanted
change at the top of Cato. Despite demands for loyalty oaths from
Cato employees by Boss Crane and a concerted Beltway PR effort to
paint himself as a Koch victim, Crane was summarily booted out with
little real fuss. Friends of Murray could hear his famous cackle
laugh ringing in their ears over this news.
This long overdue
payback for Crane had the added bonus of painting the Koch duo as
heavy-handed rightwing donor villains in the eyes of the DC-NYC
liberal intelligencia. Murray went three-for-three on the Cato leadership
coup. Sweet!
While 2012
didn’t end with some kind of Rothbardian libertarian utopia blooming,
Murray was never a utopian to begin with. He was – as he often reminded
us – simply a long run optimist. For all the friends and admirers
of Rothbard 2012 gave us much to be optimistic about. Out with the
old rubbish – with a good kick in the pants for good measure. In
with the fresh new ideas and insights of liberty. Let us hope there
are many more such Rothbardian years in store for us in the future.
January
1, 2013
Mike
Holmes [send him mail]
is a practicing CPA in the Houston area.
Copyright
© 2013 by LewRockwell.com. Permission to reprint in whole or in
part is gladly granted, provided full credit is given.
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